WHAP Review #1

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Transcript WHAP Review #1

WHAP Review #1
Time Period 1 and 2
Foundations Period:
8,000 BCE – 600 BCE
600 BCE – 600 CE
Nomads: Follow the Food
Foragers: Hunt &
Gather
 Tied to nature
 Few possessions
 Egalitarian nature

Pastoralists:
Domestication of
Animals
 Mtns./low rainfall
areas
 Male-dominated
 Stratified as size of
herds grew
 Leads to…
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The Neolithic Revolution:
8000-3000 BCE
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Agriculturalists: Plant
Domestication
Agricultural Surplus
Permanent
settlements
Idea of land
ownership: World
View Shift
MORE PATRIARCHY
Consequences of a Food Surplus
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Specialization of labor
Improved technology: metal working, irrigation
Stratification of society
Possessions
Armies
Religion
Writing
Government
Population density increases
Voila!…Civilization
Environmental Impact
Use of water
resources
 Clearing of land
 Erosion
 Deforestation
 Animals & people
living together =
disease
 Mining

River Valley Civs

Mesopotamia
– Tigris, Euphrates =
Fertile Crescent
– Sumer, Babylon
– Unpredictable
flooding
– Open geography
Sumer: The First Civilization
 Successful
agriculture, river
management
 Writing (cuneiform)
 Use of wheel
 12 month calendar, base 60,
geometry
 Polytheistic
 Ziggurats
 Ur, Uruk; 3000 BCE
Walk Like an Egyptian
Rich soil, gentle flooding
•3 Kingdoms
•water management, pyramids,
astronomy, hieroglyphs, calendar,
gold, spices
•Polytheistic
•Women ruler = Hapshepsut, buy,
sell property, inherit, will property,
dissolve marriages, still
subservient to men
• Hierarchy: pharaoh, priest,
nobles, merchants, artisans,
peasants, slaves
Indus Valley
Indus Valley: 2500-1500 BCE
 Connected
with Mespotamia via
trade
 Harrappa, Mohenjo-Daro 100,000+
each
 Master-planned, water system,
strong central gov’t, polytheistic,
written language
 Pottery, cotton, cloth
 Cities abandoned, reason unknown
 Aryans arrive 1700 BCE
Aryans
From Caucasus Mtns. Black/Caspian Sea
 Nomads who settled
 Vedas, Upanashads basis for Hinduism
 Caste system
 warriors, priests, peasants
 later re-ordered: Brahmins (priests),
warriors, landowners-merchants,
peasants, untouchables (out castes)

China: Shang on the Hwang
Shang: 1600-1100 BCE
 N.
China, walled cities, strong army,
chariots
 “The Middle Kingdom” World View
 Bronze = power, pottery, silk,,
calendar
 Patriarchal, ancestors as advocates
w/the gods
 Character writing; ancestor
veneration, Oracle bones
It’s Zhou Time
 Replaced
Shang around 1100 BCE
 Ruled 900 years, kept customs,
traditions of Shang
 Developed political ideology of
Mandate of Heaven
 Feudal system, nobles gained power,
war amongst feudal kingdoms,
collapse 256 BCE
 Led to the Warring States Period
Exceptions to the Rule
Olmecs (Mexico), Chavin (Andes)
developed similarly to others: urban,
polytheistic, irrigation, calendar,
monumental building
 The point: Similar pattern of development
in different part of earth, no contact
 The difference: Not River Valley Civs. Only
Olmecs had writing; Chavin used quipu
 Americas = CULTURALLY NOT
POLITICALLY UNIFIED

Persia: 1st Empire
 Multi-cultural
Empire, Tolerance
 Run by local governors (satraps)
 By 500 BCE Nile to Turkey/Greece to
Afghanistan
 Great Royal Road, 1700 miles
 Zoroastrian – links to monotheistic
religions (judgment day, God v. Satan set
up)
 Smaller Civs co-existed
– Lydians-coined money
– Phoenicians-22-letter alphabet, naval power
– Hebrews-Judaism, monotheism
The Classical Period Empires:
India & China
4
key empires 300 BCE-500 CE
 India
– Maurya
– Gupta
 China
– Q’in
– Han
Mauryan Empire 321-180 BCE
Mauryan Empire
 Founded
by Chandragupta Maurya
– Unified smaller Hindu kingdoms
 Greatest
extent under Ashoka who
sponsored BUDDHISM
 Big time traders: silk, cotton,
elephants (much more) to the west
 Strong military
 Ashoka’s Rock & Pillar edicts,
Buddhism spread
Gupta Dynasty 320-467 CE
Rise of Gupta
Ashoka dies 232 BCE, Mauryan’s rapidly
decline
 400s to 600 CE, revival of empire but
REASSERTED HINDUISM as primary
religion
 Smaller, more decentralized: Golden Age
of culture & learning
 Arts & Sciences; pi, zero
 Hinduism resurgent – spreads to S.E. Asia
 Women lost rights b/c of shift away from
Buddhism; child marriages common & Sati
(widow-burning) encouraged

Qin Empire
Q’in Ups in China 221-209 BCE
strong agri-econ, strong army, iron,
expansion…only lasted 15 years
 GREAT WALL…so what?
– Strong centralized, brutal gov’t
– Qin Shihuangdi emperor
– Unified kingdom, standardized
weights, measures, laws, written
lang, patriarchal
– Legalism
– Peasant rebellion brings down 209
BCE

A big hand for the Han!
Han Dynasty 200 BCE-200 CE
Strength decreases power of pastoralists
to interfere
 Expanded into Central Asia
 Silk Road to the Mediterranean
 Buddhism spread at END of Empire
 Civil Service system, bureaucracies,
resulting in stable gov’t.
 sundials, calendars, metallurgy
 Confucianism = awesome
 Mandate of Heaven
 Yellow Turban Rebellion of peasant at end
& Wang Mang’s Reforms indicate
weakness at end

Classical Civs in the Med
It’s Greek to me!
Impact of
geography =
 Trade, not
agriculture
 Est. colonies
 Governance in new
ways

The Polis
 City-states
 UNIFED
CULTURAL identity, culture
in each but politically DISUNIFIED
 Athens
– Political, commercial, cultural center
 Sparta
– militaristic, equality w/o individuality
Hierarchy
Citizens-adult males w/ property born in
Athens
 Free people w/ no political rights
 Non-citizens (included slaves 1/3 of the
Athenian pop!)
 All citizens expected to participate in
public life
 Monarchy to aristocracy to democracy
 Solon/Draco: aristocrats who worked to
ensure fair, =, open participation

Religion
 Polytheistic
 Had
human failings: got drunk,
cheated on spouses, jealous, angry,
took sides, etc.
 Greek mythology remains a large
part of Western heritage and
language
War with Persia
 Persia
invades Greece twice. Despite
great odds, Greece survives. Key
battles: Marathon 490 BCE (land),
Salamis 480 BCE (sea)
 Greece controls Aegean
 Period of peace and prosperity
Golden Age of Pericles
 Athenian
culture excels
 Democracy for all adult males
(citizens)
 Delian League-city-state alliance
 Socrates, Plato, Aristotle
– Truth through rational thought and
observation
 Math,
Science, Architecture,
Literature
Super-power, super mistake
 Athens
dominated the Delian League
 Peloponnesian War with Sparta (431
BCE)
 Weakened, Macedonian conquest
 Philip encouraged Greek culture
 Followed by son, Alexander, unified
Greece, invaded Persia
Alexander the Great?
Live fast, die young…
 Alexander
conquered Persia
 Pushed to Egypt
 Stopped at India
 Empire divided into three:
– Antigonid (Greece/Macedonia)
– Ptolemaic (Egypt),
– Seleucid (Bactria/Anatolia)
Hellenistic Era
 Greek
Culture and ideas flourished
and spread
 Alexandria (Egypt) became wealthy,
center for learning
 After death (323 BCE), empire
crumbled
 Macedonian focus on the east and
Egypt left the door open for…
The Romans: 509 BCE-476 CE
Rome
 Good
Geographic position
– Protected by mtns in north
– Peninsula
– Cross-roads in the Mediterranean
 Polytheistic,
borrowed many Greek
gods, mythology still evident in West
Social-Political Structure
Patricians
– Senate, Assembly
 Plebians
– Non-aristocrats
 Representative (as opposed to Direct in
Greece)
 12 Tables = importance of Laws (innocent
until proven guilty)
 Patriarchal/Paterfamilias
 Women influential in family, own property,
still considered inferior
 Slaves (up to 1/3) city better than country

Military Domination
 All
Directions, all the time
 Punic Wars 264-146 BCE
 Gained control of W. Med
 Defeated Macedonians
 Gaul
 Spain
 Road net, navy, aqueducts
 Cultural diffusion
Republic, no - Imperialism, yes
Increased slavery, displaced plebians,
inflation= social unrest
 Senate weakened, Triumvirate, Caesar,
Pompey, Crassus = Civil War
 Caesar assassinated 44 BCE
 2nd Triumvirate, civil war
 Octavian, I have a baby attached to my
Leg Augustus = Caesar (emperor)
 Imperial Rome
 Pax Romana
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Pax Romana
Peace and Prosperity
 Rome,
capital of western world
 Military expansion
 Rule of law, common coinage. Civil
service, secure travel for merchants
 200 years of stability
 Uniform laws, but traditional cultures
in territories survived ie Egyptians,
Hebrews
 Growth of arts and sciences
A New Religion
 Christianity
competes with
polytheism
 Christians persecuted
 Conversion of Constantine ended
persecution 312 CE
 Edict of Milan-Christianity official
religion of Rome
“What goes up…”
 Empires
fall
 Late Classical Period 200-600 CE
 Steppe People on the move,
dominoes fall
 Han, Gupta, Roman Empires fall
Collapse of the Han
 Social
– Rising tensions between rich and poor
– Poorly conceived land reform program
– Famine
– YELLOW TURBAN REVOLT
– Han Dynasty briefly restored, full
recovery impossible, collapse in 220 CE
– 400 years of regional kingdoms
Collapse of the Gupta
 Huns
24/7
 Gupta able to hold off for a while, at
great cost
 Hun kingdoms emerged in western
& northern India
 Culture survived, Hinduism, caste
system, Gupta Empire did not
“Western Rome, you are the
weakest link, good-bye”

284 CE, Diocletian
splits W-E Empire
Collapse
 No
singular reason
 Rome sacked 410 CE, 476 CE
 Internal decay
– Weak or bad leaders
– Expense of empire
– Epidemics
 External
pressures
– Huns, Visigoths
– Sheer size
Cultural Diffusion via the Silk Road
Ideas, Culture, Invention
Trade routes brought various peoples in
contact
 Pastoralists provided protection, services,
supplies
 Disease and armies also traveled the
routes, plague, small pox, Mongols
 Religion-Buddhism to China, SE Asia
 Christianity through Med, Europe, Britain
 Peoples: Huns to India, Germanic Tribes
to Europe

Religion: to 600 CE
Belief Systems through 600 CE
 Polytheism
 Confucianism
 Daoism
 Legalism
 Hinduism
 Buddhism
 Judaism
 Christianity
Commonalities
 Schisms-Divisions
resulting in
subgroups, sects
 Spread through trade
 Buddhism & Christianity = Universal
religions (all could join)
 Women rose in Buddhism &
Christianity
Confucianism
 Political-social
philosophy, not as
religion-y as most. (just expects you
to honor the gods, ancestors, etc)
 Moral, ethical, also practical
 How to restore political-social order?
 = ethical behavior of the “superior
man” who leads society
 Hierarchical – everyone know their
place
Confucianism
 Right
relationships = right society
 Put aside personal ambition for
good of state
 Ren-humanity, benevolence, kindness
 Xiao-filial
piety, family obligation,
extended
 Lead by good example
 Women, 2nd status
The Big Deal?
 An
ethical, social, political belief
system – not so much religious
 Embraced by leaders as well,
ordered society, tight families,
community harmony
 Culturally specific; only works in
context of Asian culture
Daoism-Taoism
 China
500 BCE onward
 “The Way” (of nature/cosmos)
 Lao-tzu, philosopher
 Eternal principles, passive, yielding
– Like water, yet strong, shaping
– Opening of a pot, nothing, yet not a pot
without it
 Wu
wei- going with the flow,
harmony with nature
The Big Deal?
 Counter
to Confucian activism
 Emphasis on harmony w/ nature:
Daoists focused on astronomy,
botany, chemistry
Contrast: Confucianism-Daoism
Shared belief in spirits of the dead
 Confucianism

– creating orderly society
– active relationships, active gov’t
– To guide relationships

Daoism
–
–
–
–
harmony with nature, internal peace
Simple, passive life
Little gov’t interference
To guide individual in meditation
Legalsim
 The
Q’in Dynasty
 Peace & order through centralized,
tightly controlled state
 Mistrust of human nature; reliance
on tough laws
 Focus on things the practical and
sustainers of society
 2 most worthy jobs: farmer, soldier
The Big Deal?
 Accomplished
swift reunification of
China
 Big, centralized projects like the
Great Wall
 Caused widespread resentment
among common people, led to wider
acceptance of Confucianism-Daoism
Contrast: Confucianism-Legalism
 Social
belief systems, not religions
 Intended to create orderly society
 Confucianism-fundamental goodness
– responsibilities
 Legalism-fundamental
– punishments
evil
Hinduism
Aryans, and empires of Indian
subcontinent
 Brahma-supreme force

– Gods are manifestations of Brahma
 Vishnu-preserver
 Shiva-destroyer

Reincarnation
– Dharma: rules and obligations
– Karma: fate based on how dharma was met
– Moshka: highest state of being, release of soul
The Big Deal?
 Religion
as well as social system
 Caste system, accept lot in life, next
one will be better (if dharma met)
 Close relationship w/Indian culture,
caste system has limited its spread
 Treatment of animals = 
 Hinduism spawns Buddhism
Buddhism
 India,
China, SE Asia
 Hindu prince, Siddartha Gautama
 Nepal 563-483 BCE
 Search for meaning of human
suffering
 Buddha = enlightened one
 No supreme being
Buddhism: 4 Noble Truths
 Four
noble truths
– All Life is suffering
– Suffering caused by desire
– One can be freed of desire
– Freed by following Eightfold path
Buddhism: Eightfold Path

Eightfold Path
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Right
Right
Right
Right
Right
Right
Right
Right
views
aspirations
speech
conduct
livelihood
endeavor
mindfulness
meditation

Following the path
– Leads to nirvana
– State of perfect peace &
harmony
– May take several
lifetimes

2 forms
– Theraveda: Buddha not a
god lots of monks
– Mahayana: more ritual,
reliance on priests.
Buddha a diety,
bodhisattvas, nirvana
“helpers”
The Big Deal?
Did not recognize castes
 Appealed to lower classes (duh!)
 Not attached to social structure, spread
rapidly to other cultures
 Ashoka adopted, thrived
 Eventually reabsorbed into Hinduism
 Thrived in China, Japan, SE Asia
 Force of cultural diffusion via trade,
missionaries; SYNCRETISM
 Comparable to Christianity in saints,
missionaries, role of women

Judaism
The Hebrews
 Chosen by God, special status
 Personal relationship with God
 Afterlife, tradition, doctrines, philosophy,
personal salvation
 To honor, serve God, promote prophets,
maintain cultural identity
 A religion & culture
 The First Monotheistic Belief System:

– Christianity
– Islam
Compare: Confucianism, Hinduism,
Judaism
 Seem
very different
– Confucianism, not a religion
– Hinduism, polytheistic
– Judaism, monotheistic
 All
tied to the culture where the
came from, not evangelical,
converting others
Christianity
 Splinter
group of Jews, quickly
spread throughout Roman Empire
 Jesus, son of God, Messiah of Jewish
prophecy
 Devotion to God, love of fellow man
 Jesus sent to redeem man from sin
 Salvation by faith in divinity, death,
and resurrection of Jesus.
 Crucified by Jewish leaders and
Roman gov’t 30 CE
The Big Deal
Emphasis on compassion, better life after
death; appealed to lower classes, women
 By 300 CE, most influential in Med.
Region
 Spread north and west throughout Europe
and into Central Asia & Ethiopia
 Similar to Buddhism in many ways

Foundations: 3 Themes

Civilizations
– Patterns, developments
– Rise-fall of empires: why? consequences?

Sources of Change
– Trade
– Conquest
– Invention, innovation, adaptation; iron, wheel

Man vs. Nature
– Interaction? Role of geography? Attempts to
measure/control?
– Change from survival (physical needs) to
internal peace (spiritual needs)